The National - News

WTO CONFIRMS CHINA CAN IMPOSE $3.57bn OF TARIFFS ON THE US

Amount awarded because of failure to remove anti-dumping duties is third-highest in history of organisati­on

- DEENA KAMEL

The World Trade Organisati­on gave China the green light to implement $3.57 billion (Dh13bn) in sanctions annually against the US in compensati­on for failure to remove anti-dumping duties.

The case dates back to the administra­tion of president Barack Obama and could weigh on ongoing talks to resolve the current tariff war.

The damages awarded by a three-member arbitratio­n panel are about half of the $7.04bn that China sought from the organisati­on, based in Geneva, as it argued that some US anti-dumping rules are illegal, according to a 68-page report on the WTO’s website. The amount awarded is the third highest in the WTO’s history.

“China may request authorisat­ion from the dispute settlement body to suspend concession­s or other obligation­s at a level not exceeding $3.579bn per annum,” the WTO said in its report on November 1.

The ruling comes amid negotiatio­ns between the world’s two biggest economies about “phase one” of an agreement for a long-awaited trade deal. On Friday, the US and China said they made progress in the talks aimed at resolving the 16-month trade war that has hurt global economic growth.

The global economy is projected to grow 3 per cent this year, its slowest expansion since the 2008 global financial crisis, as a result of protection­ist policies and increased uncertaint­y related to trade, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said last month.

The WTO ruling gives China a legal edge against President Donald Trump’s administra­tion and may increase tension during the talks on the trade war, which has led to retaliator­y tariffs worth $500bn in goods from trading both ways.

The issue at the centre of the case, which dates back to December 2013, is the US use of anti-dumping duties imposed on 13 Chinese products. In 2016, a WTO panel ruled the US anti-dumping duties were illegal, turning the case in Beijing’s favour.

The case was related to industries – including metals, electronic­s, machinery – and Washington’s methodolog­y of calculatin­g anti-dumping tariffs, particular­ly the “zeroing” method.

US use of the “zeroing” method tends to increase the level of American anti-dumping duties on foreign producers, which the WTO has ruled repeatedly to be illegal in a series of trade spats presented to the Geneva-based organizati­on.

However, Washington has defied those rulings and continued to employ this method of calculatio­n because of domestic pressure from industries that depend on anti-dumping tariffs to keep out cheaper Chinese and foreign imports.

After the WTO ruling on Friday, China now has the right to ask the WTO’s dispute settlement body to approve retaliator­y tariffs on US goods. These requests are typically granted.

The next move by the US would include changing its illegal anti-dumping tariffs on Chinese imports or resolving the issue with China directly – a step that would be part of the broader trade talks between Washington and Beijing.

The US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and US Treasury

Secretary Steven Mnuchin made headway on a variety of issues during a telephone call on Friday with China’s Vice Premier Liu He about an interim trade agreement, the USTR said, according to Reuters.

“They made progress in a variety of areas and are in the process of resolving outstandin­g issues,” USTR said. “Discussion­s will continue at the deputy level,” according to the statement.

The Chinese Ministry of Commerce said the two sides conducted “serious and constructi­ve” discussion­s on “core” trade points and talked about arrangemen­ts for the next round of talks, according to CNBC.

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